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Appellate
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March 17, 2026
9th Circ. Backs Rare FCA Theory In Huge Drug Prices Program
In a novel and potentially far-reaching decision, the Ninth Circuit on Tuesday revived a major hospital chain's False Claims Act suit accusing large pharmaceutical companies of massive overcharges in a prominent drug discount program where pricing disputes are common.
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March 17, 2026
Colo. Appeals Panel Weighs Standing In Charter Dispute
A Colorado school district argued to a state Court of Appeals panel Tuesday that the state school board didn't have authority to revoke the district's exclusive chartering authority in a dispute over the school board's role in contract negotiations with a charter school.
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March 17, 2026
USPTO Won't Ax Centripetal IPR, But Sends It To New Panel
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office director declined Centripetal Networks' request to quash a challenge to its cybersecurity patent that was at issue in a since-nullified multibillion-dollar judgment against Cisco Systems, saying Tuesday that the Patent Trial and Appeal Board has not yet addressed the patent's validity.
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March 17, 2026
NEPA Suit On Biden Immigration Rules Not Moot, DC Circ. Told
The D.C. Circuit was pressed to revive a lawsuit accusing the Biden administration of neglecting to consider the environmental effect of reversing the first Trump administration's border policies, even though President Donald Trump has reinstated many of those policies.
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March 17, 2026
Russia Appeals To Justices In $242M Ukraine Awards Case
Russia has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to resolve a circuit split on foreign sovereign immunity, as it looks to avoid paying more than $242 million in arbitral awards owed to Ukrainian power and gas companies whose operations in Crimea were seized during the Kremlin's 2014 invasion.
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March 17, 2026
Amici Chide Trump Admin For Calling Anthropic A Security Risk
In separate amicus briefs to the D.C. Circuit, the ACLU, tech industry groups, former government officials and moral theologians variously panned the Trump administration's designation of Anthropic PBC as a supply chain risk to national security as unjustified, unlawful and counterproductive.
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March 17, 2026
1st Circ. Pauses 3rd-Nation Deportations Ruling During Appeal
The First Circuit has granted the Trump administration a stay pending appeal of a Massachusetts federal court ruling that a class of noncitizens facing removal to countries to which they have no ties must receive meaningful notice and an opportunity to raise fears about being deported to those countries.
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March 17, 2026
4th Circ. Skeptical Of IRS Stance In Spousal Relief Case
A Fourth Circuit panel expressed skepticism Tuesday over the IRS' pursuit of a decades-old debt from a Maryland woman whose late husband's fraudulent activities triggered the liability, with one judge calling the government's interpretation of an eligible liability for spousal relief "really tricky."
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March 17, 2026
Ga. Panel Nixes $8.5M Verdict Over Fault To Nonparty
A Georgia appeals court has vacated an $8.5 million personal injury verdict awarded to a woman who fell while leaving her condo, saying the trial court wrongly allowed the jury to apportion fault to a nonparty that one of the defendants was vicariously liable for.
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March 17, 2026
NJ Justices Probe Daniel's Law Notification Requirement
The New Jersey Supreme Court on Tuesday questioned whether a notice requirement in the state's judicial privacy law is enough to ensure that any person or entity that can be held liable under the law acted with negligence.
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March 17, 2026
10th Circ. Considers Ask For New Trial In $5M Toll Lanes Suit
The Tenth Circuit on Tuesday considered a contractor's request for the court to order a new trial after a Denver federal jury awarded construction design firm Aecom $5.25 million for a contract breach in a Colorado toll lanes project, questioning the contractor's litigation strategy.
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March 17, 2026
Trump Can't Get 11th Circ. Redo On CNN Defamation Suit Toss
The Eleventh Circuit on Tuesday rejected President Donald Trump's bid for the full appeals court to weigh his $475 million suit against CNN over the network calling his 2020 presidential election fraud claims a "Big Lie," leaving intact a November panel ruling affirming the case's dismissal.
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March 17, 2026
Texas Man Asks Justices To Undo Samsung Battery Suit Win
A man who claims a Samsung SDI Co. Ltd. battery exploded in his pocket is urging the U.S. Supreme Court to revive his case, arguing the Fifth Circuit wrongly applied an exception that allows companies to evade jurisdiction in states where they do business by claiming they marketed the products to manufacturers, not consumers.
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March 17, 2026
5th Circ. Sends Texas' Ozone Plan Back To EPA
The Fifth Circuit has withdrawn its opinion backing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's disapproval of Texas' plan to meet federal ozone standards, finding the agency's new cross-state emissions rule indicates it had relied on data and modeling that was unavailable to Texas before submission.
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March 17, 2026
3rd Circ. Upholds 8-Year Bid In Lottery Scam Targeting Elderly
A Jamaican sentenced to more than eight years in prison for leading a lottery scam in New York City that fleeced at least eight elderly people of hundreds of thousands of dollars cannot escape his judgment, the Third Circuit said, upholding a district court's decision.
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March 17, 2026
4th Circ. Cautious About Ripple Effects In Trans Bias Suit
A Fourth Circuit panel expressed consternation Tuesday about the ramifications of giving a Christian university the legal green light to turn away transgender job applicants, with one judge wondering if a win for the school would let religious entities reject candidates in interracial marriages.
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March 17, 2026
4th Circ. Seems Split On Habeas In Speech Detention Case
A Fourth Circuit panel wrestled Tuesday with whether a federal court had authority to hear a Georgetown scholar's claim that he was detained for protected speech, with one judge insisting that federal immigration law forces challenges to immigration detention through the petition-for-review process.
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March 17, 2026
9th Circ. Pauses Ban On Perplexity Bot's Amazon Shopping
The Ninth Circuit has paused an order from a lower court that banned the Perplexity AI Inc.-made bot Comet from shopping on Amazon while an appeal of the order plays out.
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March 17, 2026
Conn. Panel Mostly Affirms $16.8M Building Permit Verdict
A Connecticut appeals court on Tuesday affirmed most of a $16.8 million recklessness verdict favoring the owners of a party goods store against the city of Danbury for permitting, inspecting and clearing for occupancy a 30,000-square-foot building that violated city codes and could have collapsed during use.
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March 17, 2026
Tulsa Shuts Down Engineer's Age, Race Bias Suit At 10th Circ.
The Tenth Circuit refused Tuesday to reopen a Tulsa, Oklahoma, employee's lawsuit claiming he was passed over for a promotion because he's a middle-aged Chinese man, ruling he couldn't overcome the city's assertion that it wanted someone with more leadership experience.
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March 17, 2026
NJ Restaurant Beats Customer's Suit Over E. Coli Poisoning
A New Jersey appellate panel on Tuesday upheld the dismissal of a suit over severe injuries suffered by a restaurant customer after eating an E. coli-contaminated salad, rejecting his attempt to categorize the case as a breach-of-contract claim.
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March 17, 2026
9th Circ. Says Idaho Doc Must Face Wash. Fatal Overdose Suit
A Ninth Circuit panel has reversed the dismissal of a suit alleging an Idaho-based doctor overprescribed drugs to a Washington woman, leading to her death, finding that the doctor and her clinic had enough contacts with Washington for a federal district court in that state to have jurisdiction.
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March 17, 2026
Tyler Perry's 'Mad Black Woman' TM Win Affirmed By 9th Circ.
The Ninth Circuit on Monday affirmed Tyler Perry's win over an actress alleging a filmed version of his play "Diary of a Mad Black Woman" infringed her trademark by including her name in the credits, finding the name use is fair use because she actually did appear in the video.
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March 17, 2026
2nd Circ. Panel Not Sold On Ivy League Players' Antitrust Suit
A Second Circuit panel seemed inclined Tuesday to uphold a Connecticut federal judge's dismissal of a challenge to the Ivy League's ban on athletic scholarships, though one judge suggested reviving the case to probe whether students properly pled antitrust injury.
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March 17, 2026
Pa. Schools' Property Appeal Policy Ruled Unconstitutional
A Pennsylvania school district's policy of only appealing property assessments over $500,000, which resulted in appeals involving several properties owned by a mall, violates the state's constitution, an appeals court affirmed Tuesday.
Expert Analysis
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Rule Update May Mean Simpler PFAS Reports, Faster Timeline
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's recently proposed revisions to the Toxic Substances Control Act's per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances reporting rule would substantially narrow reporting obligations, but if the rule is finalized, companies will need to prepare for a significantly accelerated timeline for data submissions, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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Navigating The New Patchwork Of Foreign-Influence Laws
On top of existing federal regulations, an expanding wave of state legislation — placing new limits on foreign-funded political spending and new registration requirements for foreign agents — creates a confusing compliance backdrop for corporations that demands careful preplanning, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.
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AI Evidence Rule Tweaks Encourage Judicial Guardrails
Recent additions to a committee note on proposed Rule of Evidence 707 — governing evidence generated by artificial intelligence — seek to mitigate potential dangers that may arise once machine outputs are introduced at trial, encouraging judges to perform critical gatekeeping functions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Getting The Message Across
Communications and brand strategy during a law firm merger represent a crucial thread that runs through every stage of a combination and should include clear messaging, leverage modern marketing tools and embrace the chance to evolve, says Ashley Horne at Womble Bond.
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How High Court Could Upend Campaign Spending Rules
In National Republican Senatorial Committee v. Federal Election Commission, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments about the constitutionality of coordinated party contribution spending caps, and its decision will have immediate practical effects just as the 2026 election gets underway, says Bill Powers at Spencer Fane.
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Previewing Justices' Driver Arbitration Exemption Review
The U.S. Supreme Court's forthcoming decision in Flowers Foods v. Brock, addressing whether last-mile delivery drivers are covered by the Federal Arbitration Act's exemption for transportation workers, may require employers to reevaluate the enforceability of arbitration agreements for affected employees, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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Opinion
Horizontal Stare Decisis Should Not Be Casually Discarded
Eliminating the so-called law of the circuit doctrine — as recently proposed by a Fifth Circuit judge, echoing Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurrence in Loper Bright — would undermine public confidence in the judiciary’s independence and create costly uncertainty for litigants, says Lawrence Bluestone at Genova Burns.
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How Fed. Circ. Shaped Subject Matter Eligibility In 2025
The Federal Circuit's most impactful patent eligibility decisions this year, touching on questions about obviousness and abstractness, provide a toolbox of takeaways that can be utilized during patent preparation and prosecution to guard against potential challenges, says Reilley Keane at Banner Witcoff.
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DC Circ. Decision Reaffirms SEC Authority Post-Loper Bright
The recent denial of a challenge to invalidate 2024 amendments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's tick size and fee-cap rules reinforces the D.C. Circuit's deference to SEC expertise in market structure regulation, even after Loper Bright, though implementation of the rules remains uncertain, say attorneys at Sidley.
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11th Circ. Ruling Stresses Economic Reality In Worker Status
The Eleventh Circuit's recent worker classification decision in Galarza v. One Call Claims, reversing a finding that insurance adjusters were independent contractors, should remind companies to analyze the actual working relationship between a company and a worker, including whether they could be considered economically dependent on the company, say attorneys at Ogletree.
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10 Commandments For Agentic AI Tools In The Legal Industry
Though agentic artificial intelligence has demonstrated significant promise for optimizing legal work, it presents numerous risks, so specific ethical obligations should be built into the knowledge base of every agentic AI tool used in the legal industry, says Steven Cordero at Akerman LLP.
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Fed. Circ. In Oct.: Spotlight On Wording Beyond Patent Claims
The Federal Circuit's recent decision in Barrette Outdoor Living v. Fortress Iron provides useful guidance on how patent prosecutors should avoid language that triggers specification disclaimer and prosecution disclaimer, doctrines that may be used to narrow the scope of patent infringement claims, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: December Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses recent rulings and identifies practice tips from cases involving securities, takings, automobile insurance, and wage and hour claims.
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10th Circ. Decision May Complicate Lending In Colorado
The Tenth Circuit's decision last month in National Association of Industrial Bankers v. Weiser clears the way for interest rate limits on all consumer lending in Colorado, including loans from out-of-state banks, potentially adding new complexities to lending to Colorado residents, say attorneys at Manatt.
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11th Circ.'s 6-Step Review May Be Ripe For Insurer Challenge
In its recent decision in Johnson v. Reliance Standard Life Insurance, the Eleventh Circuit utilized an unwieldy six-step approach to abuse-of-discretion review to find coverage in a disability benefits suit, a standard that creates subtle cognitive bias and that insurers should seek to overturn, says Scott Garosshen at Robinson & Cole.